Lost worlds and ports of call

Month: December 2005 (Page 2 of 2)

I’ll buy one of these

The death of book publishing? Perhaps. Certainly the device mentioned in this article makes the case well, and merges more than just a book reader into the package. Imagine curling up on a sofa reading a favorite author while listening to music from the same small gadget. Oh yeah!

Can’t wait

F. Paul Wilson’s new Repairman Jack novel, Harbingers, inches closer to publication. Gauntlet Press released a teaser page with the book cover, a stunning work of art. They begin taking orders on January 1, 2006, and their limited edition probably will sell out before the publication date of June. Mass market hardcover follows later in the year, but hard-core fans will want their copy early.

Regional literature

Over at lewrockwell.com, a libertarian site that also at times embraces confederacy southron culture and its implied racism and agrarian aristocracy, Gail Jarvis present a Christmas list of southern American fiction.

Meanwhile, a different sort of culture emerges in Tom Palmer’s reading of Ole Edvart Rølvaag’s novel Giants of the Earth. According to Palmer, Giants in the Earth “is about accomplishment, rivalry (of various sorts), the joy of productive work, family, love, religion, common sense, and, above all else, striving.”

All this is a far cry from the so-called Southern scenario, where on a frivolous level “beautiful women [are] eagerly sought after by men,” and “young Southern aristocrats [try] to win the affection of their true loves during Charleston’s holiday season.” Also discussed are more serious issues in the “agrarian South” of ” conflicts arising when urbanism creeps into rural communities,” and where there are “strange yet kindly master[s].”

Both Rølvang and the southern authors mentioned by Jarvis deal with non-urban settings, but in terms of cultural ideas it seems you have to look to a Norwegian to express the ideas of true American values. Jarvis fails to mention my all-time favorite novel, and a book written by a person from the south Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird. Perhaps this book is too famous, or contains the wrong values, as Jarvis seeks to highlight works that “avoid the stereotypical Hollywood clichés about the region.”

Rudyard Kipling Invented SF!

Eric S. Raymond is spurred to further reading on Kipling by a comment on his essay that I reprinted in Prometheus. I have to admit that it’s been a long time since I read Kipling, and then it mostly was his Indian tales. I’ve pulled down my Kipling sf collection and hope to read the stories again, given the comments by both Raymond and William Stoddard, who caused Raymond to re-think some of the ideas in his original essay.

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